Australia’s pop culture detectives embark on a new mystery, involving Kanye and a cult

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Two cult ABC podcasts and now a web series: Alexei Toliopoulos and Cameron James continue to suck audiences into their favourite internet wormholes.

star is dressed in a giant turtle suit, was filmed on the day of 9/11. And James has recently become obsessed with a Queensland man, Simon Dorante-Day, who’s“I have thought about him every day since the Queen died,” James said. “I’ve thought about him more than the Queen.”These are the kind of oddities you might stumble across in an internet wormhole, deep in the comments of a YouTube video or obscure Wikipedia entry you don’t remember clicking on.

Over the past few years, they’ve produced two critically acclaimed ABC podcasts based on niche pop culture mysteries. The first,Rocky IV, was inspired by a perplexing entry about a young filmmaker in the 2005 edition of, investigating a secret code in a 2013 video game about Kanye West that appears to be linked to a transhumanist religion some have labelled a cult.

If you haven’t come across their work before, you probably have one big question: why? Why would someone spend so much time investigating these things? And why would anyone else care? “It’s a question that we’re constantly asking each other,” James says, laughing. But, he says, there is something powerful about the way myths and secrets are shared in popular culture and “the sense of community” that’s built around that.: “It’s a story about a video game, but it’s also a story about spirituality and community ... It’s essentially about what happens after you die and that question of: can I live forever? Will I get to live forever, either in heaven or in a video game?”.

The new show leans into that silliness early on. The intro features both James and Toliopoulos gleefully recreating moves from“That was actually the first thing we bought [when the Screen Australia funding came through],” Toliopoulos says. “All the replicas of

 

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